July 2016     

REGION 5 NEWS
Top student teams race to Concrete Canoe nationals




The University of Florida team’s concrete canoe was among the fastest at Nationals this year.

The University of Florida and McNeese State University were among the 21 schools to qualify for this year’s National Concrete Canoe Competition, hosted in June at the University of Texas, Tyler.

École de technologie supérieure finished first in the overall standings, following the school’s steel bridge team national championship two weeks earlier. UCLA finished second, followed by the University of Nevada, Reno.

Florida, the defending champs, finished ninth overall, propelled by a third-place showing the in the speed races.

McNeese State earned the Spirit of the Competition Award, celebrating the attitude and sportsmanship the team displayed in its debut Nationals appearance.

View more photos and see complete 2016 NCCC results.
FLORIDA SECTION

Florida infrastructure grades show improvement, indicate remaining challenges

The grades are in for Florida infrastructure, and the good news is they show some improvement. The Florida Section released its 2016 Report Card for Florida’s Infrastructure with an overall grade point average of C.

The challenge remains though: with Florida’s population growing by 1 million people per year, the state’s infrastructure needs to improve at an even faster rate.

“Because of population growth and the various needs throughout our state, from the Keys and Miami, all the way up Pensacola, Tallahassee and Jacksonville, we need to have a stronger commitment to funding our infrastructure and having the collaboration and coordination needed to get there,” Section President Jose Acosta, P.E., M.ASCE, told WFSU.

ASCE members graded the area’s infrastructure by eight criteria: capacity, condition, funding, future need, operation and maintenance, public safety, resilience, and innovation.

Florida graded highest in bridges (B), but struggled in school facilities, stormwater, and coastal areas.

Read the complete Report Card.

JULY ASCE BOARD OF DIRECTION MEETING HIGHLIGHTS
ASCE Board Sets Strategic Direction; Approves Policies, Budget 


Melissa Wheeler, M.ASCE, your Region 5 Director, is a member of the Georgia Section.  Melissa represented you at the ASCE Board meeting in San Diego, CA, July 8-9.  

At its most recent meeting, the ASCE Board debated a host of key civil engineering and ASCE issues and set direction on how to advance the profession and strengthen the organization in the coming year and beyond.

In addition to deliberations on strategic initiatives, adopting new policies, and passing a budget (see story in ASCE News),  the Board addressed additional items on its extensive agenda.

As part of its fiscal year 2017 budget, the Board approved a new print ASCE News newsletter that will be mailed to members 10 times per year in conjunction with Civil Engineering magazine. Beginning in November 2016, this publication will deliver timely highlights of ASCE activities in a vibrant, brief format that provides both at-a-glance updates and guides readers to more content that can be found online. In a survey of randomly selected ASCE members who received sample copies, some 80% said they learned something new about ASCE activities from going through the newsletter.

The Board continues to debate how best to align the Society geographically and to most effectively constitute itself as a Board. After studying options for realignment, the Board elected to retain the Society’s existing Region structure, alignment, and representation, for the present. A new task committee will be formed to examine a number of proposals that were raised during the Board’s discussion.  

The Society’s Member Communities Committee (MCC) outlined its strategic planning process and received endorsement of its mission to enable members “to advance the profession and enhance their career growth by integrating member support and promoting member engagement.” MCC oversees such successful programs as the Multi-Region Leadership Conferences and younger member and student programs.

The Board heard progress on ASCE’s Global Strategy, which aims to enhance ASCE’s global image, global voice, and global footprint; reserve a seat at the table for ASCE in global civil engineering forums; and expand products and services for international members. Currently 25,870 of ASCE’s more than 150,000 members live outside the U.S.

The ASCE Public Policy Committee (PPC) held its strategic discussion with the Board, highlighting that:

•  ASCE successfully advocated for infrastructure issues on Capitol Hill, such as the passage and signing into law of the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act last year, and progress toward passing a new Water Resources Development Act (WRDA). The Senate WRDA bill would authorize $9 billion for new projects and studies at the Army Corps of Engineers, add a dam rehabilitation component to the National Dam Safety Program, establish a new Water Infrastructure Trust Fund, and provide $220 million in aid for Flint, Michigan.

•  ASCE worked closely with Congress as a founding member of the STEM (Science-Technology-Engineering-Mathematics) Education Coalition to help achieve enactment of the Every Student Succeed Act, which maintains a strong focus on STEM subjects.

•  ASCE has been active in monitoring and addressing recent threats to professional licensure in several states. During the 2015 legislative sessions, six states considered measures to eliminate all professional licensure. While none of these measures were enacted, ASCE views this as a serious threat to public safety and continues to mobilize in opposition. 
 
To share your thoughts on ASCE issues and governance,please email Melissa



FLORIDA SECTION
University of Florida professor named ASCE Fellow


Nawari O. Nawari, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, an associate professor in the College of Design, Construction and Planning at the University of Florida, has been named a Fellow by the ASCE Board of Direction.

Nawari has also served on the faculty of UF’s School of Architecture, and has more than 25 of experience in design, teaching, and research specializing in architectural structures and building information modeling.

Read more about what made him worthy.

FLORIDA SECTION
Active journal editor elevated to Fellow


John O. Sobanjo, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, a professor at Florida State University in the department of civil and environmental engineering, has been named a Fellow by the ASCE Board of Direction.

Sobanjo also is an associate editor for ASCE’s Journal of Bridge Engineering and is on the editorial board of the ASCE-ASME Journal of Risk and Uncertainty in Engineering Systems. He was on the organizing committee for the IEEE Big Data Conference, held in Washington, DC, in 2014.

Read more about Sobanjo’s career.



Great outreach event or other activity? Let the whole Region know!

If you’re a local ASCE leader and your Section, Branch, Younger Member Group, or Student Chapter has staged any special events, engaged in outreach from grade-school kids to lawmakers, done charity work, fund raising or anything of the sort, let ASCEnews Weekly know and we may include it in next month’s Region report. You may already have written about it and posted pictures in your newsletter, website, or social media. Share the details and any photos at asce.org/localnews. Got questions? Write to submissions@asce.org.


See the other Region reports for July
If you live adjacent to a Section in a different Region, or are merely interested in the other Region reports for July, click on each to view them:
 
Region 1   Boston Society of Civil Engineers Section, Buffalo Section, Connecticut Society of Civil Engineers Section, Ithaca Section, Maine Section, Metropolitan Section, Mohawk-Hudson Section, New Hampshire Section, New Jersey Section, Puerto Rico Section, Rhode Island Section, Rochester Section, Syracuse Section, Vermont Section 

Region 2   Central Pennsylvania Section, Delaware Section, Lehigh Valley Section, Maryland Section, National Capital Section, Philadelphia Section, Pittsburgh Section

Region 3   Akron-Canton Section, Central Illinois Section, Central Ohio Section, Cincinnati Section, Cleveland Section, Dayton Section, Duluth Section, Illinois Section, Michigan Section, Minnesota Section, North Dakota Section, Quad Cities Section, Toledo Section, Wisconsin Section

Region 4   Arkansas Section, Indiana Section, Kentucky Section, North Carolina Section, South Carolina Section, Tennessee Section, Virginia Section, West Virginia Section

Region 5   Alabama Section, Florida Section, Georgia Section, Louisiana Section, Mississippi Section
 
Region 6   New Mexico Section, Oklahoma Section, Texas Section

Region 7   Colorado Section, Iowa Section, Kansas City Section, Kansas Section, Nebraska Section, South Dakota Section, St. Louis Section, Wyoming Section

Region 8   Alaska Section, Arizona Section, Columbia Section, Hawaii Section, Inland Empire Section, Montana Section, Nevada Section, Oregon Section, Seattle Section, Southern Idaho Section, Tacoma-Olympia Section, Utah Section

Region 9   Los Angeles Section, Sacramento Section, San Diego Section, San Francisco Section

Region 10  All International Sections, Branches, and Groups


Missed last month's Region 5 update?
See the June edition of  News Around Region 5

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ALABAMA SECTION
Alabama’s Richard Woodruff, member for 79 years, dies at 103


One of ASCE’s longest tenured members has died, a professional who continued giving of his engineering abilities to projects in Alabama long after retirement.

Richard Shaul Woodruff, who joined ASCE in 1937 as a student at the University of Alabama College of Engineering, died in Birmingham at the age of 103.

He achieved ASCE Life Member status in 1978, before the oldest of today’s Younger Members were even born.

Woodruff worked for 37 years at the Alabama Power Company, where he was manager of the Hydroelectric Plant Planning Section for Southern Company Services Inc.

His contributions did not stop, though, with retirement. Read more about how Woodruff continued to help Alabama with is engineering expertise even into his 90s.